LUANDA – Angola may bring back a rule requiring importers to pay insurance locally instead of abroad for imports, as part of measures aimed at controlling the outflow of capital.

Hit by depressed prices of crude oil, Africa’s second largest oil exporter has been depleting its foreign exchange reserves to fund imports and pay down government debt. Oil output represents 40 per cent of gross domestic product and more than 95 per cent of foreign exchange revenue.

Hernani Paulo, a specialist at the National Insurance Regulatory and Supervision Agency (ARSEG), told Reuters the decree was awaiting enforcement after it was approved by the Council of Ministers. “It is just waiting for enforcement which can happen any time,” Paulo said.

Angola has implemented a number of currency controls, including cutting the amount of hard currency travellers are allowed to take abroad, to cope with a foreign currency shortage that has led to a flourishing black market.

Until now, importers paid for insurance of their goods overseas in foreign currency, but the new rule will force them to pay insurance locally in the local kwanza currency.